Final answer:
English colonists along the Atlantic coast were eager to move in the mid-1700s. By the mid-1700s, it is true that English colonists were eager to move, largely due to overcrowding and poverty in England.
Step-by-step explanation:
The statement in the question is true. By the mid-1700s, English colonists along the Atlantic coast were eager to move. This can be seen through their establishment of colonies in different regions such as the Chesapeake Bay colonies and the New England colonies. These colonists sought new opportunities and a better life in the Americas, away from overcrowding and poverty in England.
By the mid-1700s, it is true that English colonists were eager to move, largely due to overcrowding and poverty in England. Most colonists were not self-sufficient and did rely on British goods, and the Conciliatory Proposition did not meet most demands of the American colonists.
The statement that by the mid-1700s, English colonists along the Atlantic coast were eager to move is A) True. The English had not established a permanent settlement in the Americas at the start of the seventeenth century. However, over the next century, they rapidly expanded, with many English emigrants arriving in the colonies such as Virginia, Maryland, and various New England colonies due to overcrowding and poverty at home.
Concerning the claim that most eighteenth-century North American colonists were self-sufficient and did not need to import consumer goods from Britain, this is B) FALSE. The colonies were very much part of the transatlantic trade and relied on British goods.
The Conciliatory Proposition did not grant most of the demands of the American colonists; thus, the correct answer is b. False. Similarly, Carolina's policy of religious toleration did indeed help to attract new colonists, making the correct answer to that statement a. True.